Filed under from iPhone on May 3 | 1 comment
If you take a look at the sidebar of the site now, you’ll notice I ditched the big ole’ Google Ads. This is because I have joined Pistach.io‘s Flash Pack and now will be running only that banner in the place of the larger, slower, more annoying Google Ads banners that were in the sidebar before. This will speed up the pages load times throughout the site and reduce the long scrolling sidebar to a more manageable level.
Aral Balkan and Dave Stone from Built By Dave, this network of sites operates under a simple premise similar to the The Deck, run by Coudal Partners. Smaller numbers of ads through a smaller network, placed on good sites that reach people that might actually be interested in the products and services running in that placement. Rates for the ads are really quite reasonable, and the backend is very very solid. It’s built on Amazon’s EC2, S3, and SimpleDB systems. If you are interested in placing an ad on the network please visit Pistach.io.
I’m proud and very happy to be in the Flash Pack with such an esteemed list of bloggers. I’ll let Aral publish that list at his site, but it’s a virtual who’s who in Flash platform blogs. This new ad placement will not change my focus which is and has been my experiments, thoughts and opinions in and around web design/development and creating content in the Flash ecosystem. I welcome your comments and suggestions about this move.
Sidenote… Just to let you know, I have a list of topics lined up in the coming weeks that I think will be valuable content to my readers. A couple book reviews, some more source code, a couple little gotchas and more of the regular commentary on current developments. As always thanks for visiting and continuing to prompt me to write.
Filed under Blogging on May 1 | 0 comments
Woohoo… subscribe to my feed! It’s in feedburner so it’s a snap to use. Do it!
For more info on RSS Day, check it out…

Filed under Flash, Industry on May 1 | 1 comment
So Flash and Flash Video look to be open now, at least from a marketing perspective. Not cynical or anything, truly hoping that this does work out. I’m excited. This is a big announcement. Many interesting things will happen because of this… some of thing things on my mind I am hoping will happen:
- The last reservations of the neckbeard/”Flash is a binary blob” will melt away. This may take a while, but we can certainly hope so. Open source zealots will have little to complain about with Flash player 10.
- The open format of the SWF/FLV will really push Adobe to continue to improve it, pushing it light years ahead of other web and desktop runtimes out there.
- The Nintendo Wii will get Flash player 9.
- The iPhone will get Flash.
- 64 bit linux plug-ins will finally happen
- A multitude of easy to use or low cost Flash streaming solutions will materialize.
- Commodity hosts will begin to offer FLV streaming
- FLV playback could get bundled into DVD players, set top boxes, etc.
- Virtually every mobile phone in the world will have Flash
- Appliances and other consumer electronics will begin to adopt Flash as the preferred UI development platform, thus increasing the market for Flash content exponentially making your skills as a Flash platform developer even more valuable.
- Open GL Support? Maybe, please?
Some things I am am concerned about:
- Flash players will become fragmented and certain variants will lack features.
- FLV players will popup on machines that can only act as dumb video players but lack interactivity capabilities making them second class citizens in the landscape.
- Refrigerators will now have ad banners running on them.
- Poor implementations of the Flash player will skimp on security, tarnishing SWF’s name
After reading the FAQs and watching Kevin Lynch’s video, I am hopeful that the good things I mentioned will happen, and pretty sure that the bad things can be avoided. Check out the video here. How about you? What are you excited about? What are your concerns?
There is undoubtedly going to be a lot of info coming out in the near future on this, even though the true effects of the announcement might not truly be felt for months. Peter Elst has some comments really worth reading on this announcement, too. Ryan Stewart has some info, too.